Thursday, July 25, 2013

Textile Innovations



By guest blogger Jana

I’m working right now on the Amiga cardigan from Knitty because Kay’s already made about 10 of them and I feel like a slacker. I’m using the tsumugi silk from Habu because Kay used it for one of her Amigas and I’m apparently imitating both sisters this summer. It’s working up beautifully, and it got me thinking about the explosion in textile technology over the past three decades.

I began as a crocheter in a tiny West Texas town where the only yarn available was crochet cotton or coarse slick acrylic in fluorescent orange and harvest gold. In the early 1980s I lived in New York City. I didn’t have enough money to buy “good” yarn from yarn stores – which were intimidating places anyhow because I was a newbie knitter and New York yarn store owners back then were rude and dismissive. Even so, I did venture into a few to marvel at the variety of wools and textures. Boucle. Hairy alpaca. Silk yarn so breathtakingly expensive I didn’t dare touch it. Most of my yarn purchases were from the ubiquitous five-and-ten-cent stores that dotted Manhattan, and were some variation of acrylic or cotton. I took a couple of classes at the Fashion Institute of Technology and learned how synthetic fibers are created, never dreaming that this same technology would be applied years later to materials that still seem totally 24th century.

So, 30 years ago, there was wool, cotton, linen, silk, rayon, and acrylic yarn. What do we have now?

How about yarn made of crushed pearls, jadeite, sugar cane, pineapple plant, milk protein, soy, corn, New Zealand possum, hemp, bamboo, paper, yak, electrical conductive fiber, musk-ox, buffalo, and mink? (Yes, there will soon be yarn at Looking Glass that is mink – sheared mink, mind you, wherein no minks were killed to get the fiber. I still can’t wrap my head around how the heck you shear a mink. Also, “mink” starts sounding really silly when you say it a dozen times in a row.) I fully expect to hear soon about yarn made from coffee beans and dog biscuits. But please, not yarn from cat food. I have enough of that in my house already.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

On Stashing or Not



On Stashing or Not

by guest blogger Jana
 
I’ve always identified myself as a non-collector. I don’t have display cases full of Scottie dog figurines or a closet stuffed with vintage aprons. Giraffes won’t spring out at you from corners of my home. The tops of my kitchen cabinets aren’t lined with quirky teapots. I have an unholy number of books, but I don’t collect them – once I’ve read them, most of them go out of my life.  I suppose I could be talked into collecting Mark Rothko paintings or Donald Judd sculptures, but as I’m not a billionaire I don’t think that will be a concern.

Which brings me to the tricky area of yarn.  Does the fact that the walls of one entire bedroom of my house is lined with yarn, floor to ceiling, including the closet, make me a yarn collector? I can’t claim that I acquired each of those skeins with some purpose in mind (which would make them “inventory”). My usual mode of acquisition is more along the lines of me see yarn, me want yarn, me take yarn home and put it in yarn room. Does calling it a “stash” make it not a “collection”? Can I be someone who does not collect things and still have a stash?

My very identity is at stake here.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Monthly knitting group at Tree House + Julia Child, by guest blogger Jana

Our 2nd Saturday of the month knitting group meets on March 9 at the Tree House Bakery/Cafe in DeVargas Mall, 10 am to noonish. Great food and drink, good conversation, good time all around, so please join us.

Here's one of my favorite quotations, from Julia Child:

"Find something you're passionate about and keep tremendously interested in it."

If that's not a justification for knitting, I don't know what is.

What are some of your passions? They really do need feeding, so be sure to make time for them each day, or at least each week.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

The Thrifty Life



The Thrifty Life

By Jana

I’ve made a commitment this year to only add to my wardrobe if it’s something I have made or have purchased from a thrift store (shoes and underwear excepted). Most of the clothes sold in retail stores in the US have been made in factories overseas, many of them in Export Processing Zones that are run like a cross between sweatshops and antebellum cotton plantations, and I don’t want to contribute to that if it can be avoided. Luckily, most yarn manufactories are not badly run – and many of them contribute to their local economies in healthy ways – so I have no problem purchasing yarn from my local yarn store. (Well, I may have a problem, but it runs more toward an addiction, which is a topic for another day.) When I buy from a thrift store, I’m keeping an object out of the waste stream, and I’m helping out whatever charity the thrift store supports. I confess I also enjoy the thrill of finding something unexpected – it’s always a crap shoot. With just a little sewing skill, I can refashion clothes that don’t fit me into ones that do. Over the years I have found Spode china, clothes from Giorgio Armani, Jill Sander, and Issey Miyake, and an exact replica of the Pyrex bowls my mother used but that had disappeared after her death. And this past Saturday, I scored in a big way: a vintage dress form for only $50! I’ve been contemplating getting a dress form to help with my knitting and sewing, but was daunted by the price, so I was overjoyed to find this one. I’m thinking of naming her Tabitha, after the mother in A Prayer for Owen Meany whose dress form plays an important part in that novel.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Cold with a chance of freezing by guest blogger Annie



Cold with a chance of freezing by guest blogger Annie

Call me a wimp but I’m ready for spring. We haven’t had such a bad winter so far but I seem to be much more sensitive to it this year. I’m just tired of being cold all the time or being in public buildings that are so overheated I feel as if I’ve stepped into the Sahara.  I’ve never enjoyed the first few months of the year – the holidays are over, it’s cold and dark but this year I’m determined not to let the “grim” set in. I’ve decided to celebrate every day that it gets above freezing and there is no wind and also to look for reasons to get out of the house and forget the season. I’ve started a list and shared it below. I’d love to hear your methods for staying cheery in the midst of winter!


  1.      Knit night – always good for inspiration 
  2.    2nd Saturday knitting – this month at Tree House 10am-noon   on the 12th 
  3.      Cirque du Soliel in Rio Rancho at the Santa Ana Star Center 
  4.       Matinee movies 
  5.       Going to the dog park and watching them play – they don’t mind the cold! 
  6.      Hot chocolate 
  7.       Spinning group


Wednesday, January 2, 2013

New Year, New Knits! by guest blogger Annie



New Year, New Knits! by guest blogger Annie

Happy New Year. I hope your holiday was filled with all the things you want your year to include.

I spent the first day of the year doing a little of all my favorite things. Of course I started by casting on some new knits. A pair of socks were first as I didn’t have any in my “wait in line” knitting bag, then I moved on to casting on a sweater – or more precisely casting on again for the “Essential sweater dress”. I made the dress last summer but when I was finished it could have been a tent and I could not face ripping it so I packed it away to be forgotten. I stopped myself before I got crazy and cast on anything else and moved instead to the spinning wheel. I spun up a bobbin of some lovely Mountain Colors  BFL – if you spin you should check this out in the shop it’s really nice.

I spent some time reflecting on goals for the year – many of which involve knitting so I’ll share those.
1. Use Ravelry to track projects and stash
2. 24 pair of socks this year
3. Knit holiday gifts all year
4. Continue charity knitting
5. Organize the stash room!
6. Complete the first section of the Master Knitter program

That is quite a list on paper but I think it’s good to have goals and I need a little pushing every now & then. I wonder what all of you have planned for your knitting this year.
The shop is fully restocked with lots of great yarn – Cascade Highland in colors, Cascade Duo in colors, Kid Seta, 220, Venezia, and the list goes on and on. Stop by and pick yourself up a treat to keep you warm on these cold nights!